By Matt Hawes
Campaign for Liberty’s Kevin Brett reports on where income tax revenues go, proposals to do away with the 16th Amendment and the income tax, and the growing movement for lower taxes and less government.
By Matt Hawes
Campaign for Liberty’s Kevin Brett reports on where income tax revenues go, proposals to do away with the 16th Amendment and the income tax, and the growing movement for lower taxes and less government.
You can tell a lot about a guy from the people he chooses as his friends — and his enemies.
The mayor counts as friends a circle that includes lobbyists, developers and big shots who are getting rich off of the public business and see opportunities to get even richer.
And there’ are people like Brian D’Arcy — the DWP union boss who thinks labor negotiations are a game of blackmail and gets spectacular union contracts and promises of thousands of more jobs from the mayor when everybody else is hurting and taking pay cuts or losing jobs.
Then, there are his enemies, enemies of his own making, people like the DWP managers he dismisses collectively as incompetent and recalcitrant without having the guts to offer specific names or do anything about them during his five years as mayor.
And City Attorney Carmen Trutanich has become Antonio’s Enemy No.1 because he poses the greatest danger as the only independent elected city official, the only one who isn’t owned by the same crowd of insider profiteers that hover around everyone else in City Hall.
The mayor’s way of dealing with Trutanich is to break his promises and gut his department by slashing his budget by more than a third this year and next.
Trutanich is no one to be messed with lightly. He fired off a letter to the mayor and put it up on his website accusing Antonio of political cynicism and “a remarkable lack of leadership and imagination” that puts “public safety and the protection of taxpayer dollars at substantial risk.”
“You have apparently lost faith in and given up on the innate ingenuity and work ethic of its residents and employees, who have suggested and implemented innovative cost-saving measures that can lead us through these challenging budgetary times. Moreover, your proposed Budget fails to recognize the core missions of the City and thereby continues to place public safety and the protection of taxpayer dollars at substantial risk.
“In short, your proposals will only exacerbate the budget crisis looming in the future and appear to be motivated by some agenda other than the continued success of all of the public safety offices in this City, including the City Attorney’s Office.”
Trutanich notes the mayor’s budget only cuts his own office’s spending by 2.6 percent 2.6% r, and “despite a so-called ‘hard hiring freeze’ for other City employees, your office continues to hire political staff.”
The impact on losing 100 more attorneys, Trutanich said, will be dramatic in terms of his ability to defend the city against $2 billion in pending liability claims and will force him to discontinue prosecuting discretionary cases involving “gang injunctions and related prosecutions; the Safer City Initiative; the Neighborhood Prosecutor Program; the Citywide Nuisance Abatement Program; the Housing and Problem Properties Program; environmental and consumer protection; code or “broken window” enforcement; domestic violence
prosecutions; and many other non-priorable criminal offenses.”
For a political cynic like the mayor, the decision to go to war is a big mistake, a blunder that violates the first precept in Machiavelli’s bible of political manipulation: Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.
The disintegration of the mayor’s political strategy is happening so fast it is hard to keep up. But the signs of his desperation are clear enough.
He dismissed the likes of Eli Broad and RIchard Riordan from the day he took office as mayor and then suddenly, as budget crisis was crashing down on him, turned to them and surrendered his authority to their guy Austin Beutner, a fabulously rich corporate takeover financier with nothing better to do since he fell off a bike and nearly killed himself.
Three months later, Beutner has become the extra-legal de facto mayor, calling the shots in nearly a dozen key departments on everything from economic development to the sale of city assets to reduce the massive budget deficits.
This week he took on yet another major job for his dollar-a-year salary as interim general manager of the Department of Water and Power, a dual role that tramples on the city charter’s intent to provide checks and balances to ensure civilian oversight on policy and prevent corruption.
Interviewed by Warren Olney on KCRW’s Which Way LA? (link to podcast, Beutner comes up at 27:45 minute mark), the 9th DWP boss in 10 years showed he was a quick study in the fine art of saying little specific but implying a great deal, thus leaving all his options open: Get a green energy plan together, be transparent enough to sell it so he can get the rate hikes the mayor wants and reduce the political tensions enough to be able to hire a professional utility manager for the first time in years.
Even as he was chatting with Olney, the mayor was praising D’Arcy as “part of the solution” and waving his enemies list in front of editors and reporters at the LA Times, defaming without naming names the DWP management as “”wall to wall…at the highest levels…the biggest defenders of the status quo.”
“For four years, I’ve battled a bureaucracy that just won’t respond to the policy direction,” Villaraigosa said. “It’s been an absolute war. Getting through that Byzantine bureaucracy is very difficult . We’ve got to figure out a way to make that agency more transparent.
“They undermined [former General Manager Ronald] Deaton, they undermined [former General Manager David] Nahai. Even [outgoing General Manager S. David] Freeman. I’m talking about that upper-level management . You can’t fire them. They just go back to the Civil Service system” and they lose about $15,000 in salary as well as their city-provided cars, but they stay in the DWP. They out-wait you. They’ve out-waited everybody.”
The funny thing about that is Nick Patsaouras told him the same thing two years ago with the only difference being that the then DWP Commission President identified by name those who wanted to open up the books and were capable of doing a good job and those in the way.
Patsaouras got fired for his trouble and his solution, creation of a Rate Payer Advocate, was killed because transparency was the last thing the mayor wanted.
But it has reared its head and left the mayor and his allies scrambling to derail it by putting it under the control of the compliant Controller Wendy Greuel even as some members of the City Council are showing signs of getting uppity with an awakening public demanding better of them than they have seen in a long time.
Read Trutanich’s letter in full, a declaration of war between elect officials in LA that has no precedent in recent history:
CARMEN A. TRUTANICH
City Attorney
April 21,2010
Honorable Mayor Villaraigosa:
This letter is in response to your proposed Budget for Fiscal Year 2010/11 issued on April 20, 2010. Needless to say, I am deeply disappointed in your proposal, which displays a remarkable lack of leadership and imagination, and further demonstrates a fundamental failure of management on the part of the Mayor’s Office.
The proposed Budget is not a successful strategy to protect and promote the fiscal health and public safety of our City, and clearly fails to recognize and appreciate the basic skills necessary to efficiently manage its resources and employees. Rather than creatively and effectively managing this City, you have apparently lost faith in and given up on the innate ingenuity and work ethic of its residents and employees, who have suggested and implemented innovative cost-saving measures that can lead us through these challenging budgetary times. Moreover, your proposed Budget fails to recognize the core missions of the City and thereby continues to place public safety and the protection of taxpayer dollars at substantial risk. In short, your proposals will only exacerbate the budget crisis looming in the future and appear to be motivated by some agenda other than the continued success of all of the public safety offices in this City, including the City Attorney’s Office.
It is also obvious that your proposals cynically protect political positions at
the expense of public safety and essential services. For example, I note with
great dismay that the proposed Budget recommends only a 2.6% reduction for
the Mayor’s Office. I also understand that, despite a so-called “hard hiring
freeze” for other City employees, your office continues to hire political staff, which
is not tasked to perform public safety functions. In comparison, the Office of the
City Attorney, which is a designated public safety office under the City Charter,
has been targeted for a reduction of 18% (or approximately $17 million), which is
unprecedented for any City public safety agency and will result in the
unnecessary layoff of over 100 prosecutors and support staff. Such a severe
reduction to this Office constitutes an assault to public safety and a diminished
capacity to protect the City’s treasury. Our City and its residents need and
deserve reasoned and competent management In the effective delivery of
essential services, not the wasteful protection of overtly and costly political
positions proposed in your Budget.
In addition to being misleading, the proposed Budget disproportionately
impacts this Office compared to other public safety offices. As you are aware,
priorto the issuance of the proposed Budget, representatives of both your office
and the CAO advised this Office that a 10% (or $9.3 million) reduction, which
could be offset by any savings derived from anticipated furloughs, would be
recommended for this Office. In addition to offsets or “credits” for any furlough
savings, our Office was advised that any remaining deficit could be addressed
and any layoffs avoided through cooperative or “incentivized” agreements with
other departments, in which our budget would be credited by revenues collected
or saved by this’ Office. Specifically, our Office provided your office with
materials and inforrnation regarding several such cost-saving and revenue-
generating projects, including the consolidation of the Workers’ Compensation
Program and certain debt and tax collections activities within our Office, as well
as the proposed Administrative Code Enforcement program. Obviously, I was
surprised and shocked to see your recommendation for an 18% (or $17 million)
reduction, with no credits for furloughs, for this Office. The credibility of your
office has been sorely tested and damaged by this and other recent actions.
It is beyond dispute that, as required under the City Charter, the Office of
the City Attorney provides and performs vital and essential and mandated public
safety services and financial protection to the City and its citizens. As you know,
there are three primary and core public safety agencies under the Charter: the
Los Angeles Police Department; the Los Angeles Fire Department; and the City
Attorney’s Office. Your proposed FY 2010/11 Budget recommends an 18%
reduction in the funding for the Office of the City Attorney, which, when combined
with the 16% reduction imposed during FY 2009/10, equates to a total reduction of more than 30% over two budget cycles. This is the largest reduction suffered
by any public safety agency in the City and poses an unacceptable risk to public
safety. On the other hand, your proposed Budget proposes a 2% reduction for
LAFD and an increase of 1% for LAPD.
As a public safety agency, I believe this Office should be treated no
differently than LAFD or LAPD, especially given the critical support and
successful defense our Office provides to these departments each day. There is
no rational basis to increase the LAPD by 1 %, while simultaneously reducing the
number of prosecutors handling its cases by the proposed 18%. Without city
prosecutors, persons arrested by LAPD will be released without being charged.
As noted by the late Chief Daryl Gates in response to proposed budget cuts to
the City Attorney’s Office in 1982, “[I]t makes no sense for the Police Department
to apprehend (a criminal) and then find the prosecution cannot be completed.”
(See copy of attached article in Los Angeles Times, 117/82). It should also be
noted, that in 1982, then-Chief Gates publicly stated that he was prepared and
committed to share resources with the City Attorney’s Office in order to
accomplish the joint mission of the two departments, namely, to protect our
residents from crime. To date, there has been no effort by your office or the
LAPD to act in a similarly gracious partnership of true shared-sacrificed in our
joint mission.
This Office has more discretion in deciding whether to file and prosecute
criminal cases, as opposed to defending civil liability cases filed against the City
by private parties. As such, in the event this Office suffers the proposed 18%
reductions and layoffs, I will have no choice but to discontinue prosecuting those
criminal matters in which I have some limited discretion. These matters include
the following: gang injunctions and related prosecutions; the Safer City Initiative;
the Neighborhood Prosecutor Program; the Citywide Nuisance Abatement
Program; the Housing and Problem Properties Program; environmental and
consumer protection; code or “broken window” enforcement; domestic violence
prosecutions; and many other non-priorable criminal offenses.
Under the mandate of the City Charter, this Office also serves as the
guardian of the City’s treasury. Although the Mayor proposes the budget and the
Council approves it, this Office aggressively defends it everyday from liability and
lawsuits that seek to deplete it through frivolous and unreasonable damage
claims. Every reduction in the number of deputy city attorneys defending the City
against frivolous lawsuits exposes the City to potentially more millions of dollars
in damages and payouts to private lawyers looking for a payday from the City’s
deep pockets.
Since I took office in July 2009, our attorneys have vigorously andsuccessfully protected the City by winning 32 out of 32 civil trials – and saving theCity over $100 million in potential damage awards. Obviously, had the City been held liable at trial, the jury or the court could have ordered damages and costs significantly higher than the last pre-trial settlement offer, which could have totaled in the hundreds of millions of dollars. Although this Office has been extraordinarily successful over the past nine months, the loss of any additional attorneys will greatly diminish our ability to further protect the City’s treasury from such liability damage claims.
Moreover, additional reductions to our budget will not limit the City’s
liability. Rather, such reductions will expose the City’s treasury to even more or
potentially higher liability payouts. This Office does not create liability – other
departments within the City engage in activities that create tens of millions of
dollars of potential liability each year. Currently, our Office is defending the City
against nearly $2 billion in civil liability claims, which if lost, will be paid by the
taxpayers. As the City’s lawyers, we are solely responsible under the Charter to
defend the City against these and other potential liabilities created by other
departments. Therefore, when you reduce the budget of this Office by 18%, I
cannot magically reduce the number of civil liability cases currently pending
against this City by a corresponding 18% or lower the City’s potential exposure
by even one dollar. Even though you may want to layoff employees of this
Office who tirelessly and professionally defend this City, you cannot wish away
the thousands of pending lawsuits demanding potentially billions of dollars from
the taxpayers of this City. Unlike sidewalks to be fixed or trees to be trimmed,
you cannot pick and choose which civil lawsuits to ignore. Each and every one
of these thousands of lawsuits must be answered and defended. Losing just one
of these cases, due to a lack of experienced or a sufficient number of counsel,
could cost the City millions of dollars in damages and wipe out any potential
savings you mistakenly and shortsightedly believe can be accomplished through
further reductions to this Office.
In fact, rather than suffer the additional and punitive proposed 18%
reduction, this Office must be recognized and rewarded for its tremendous
success in reducing costs and eliminating its deficit during FY 2009/10. When I
assumed Office on July 1, 2009, there was a deficit of over $18 million. Since
that date, our employees have successfully generated savings that have reduced
the deficit, which is now targeted to be entirely eliminated by the end of FY
2009/10 on June 30. We have accomplished this success through a combination
of ERIP, furloughs, reductions in costs for outside counsel, vendors and litigation
expenses, as well as increased subrogation collections and environmental and
consumer protection penalties – and just plain hard work.
Our employees have accomplished and endured all cost-saving measuresthey have been asked to implement and will deliver a balanced budget.Unfortunately, other City departments have apparently not been able to properlymanage and balance their own budgets. Despite our success and sacrifice,however; our employees are again being asked to bear the burden of those other departments that have not been properly managed and will suffer a disproportionate share of the reductions – all to the very grave risk to publicsafety and the City treasury. Moreover, such reductions will result in even more potential liability for the City due to lack of staff necessary to defend against lawsuits or prevent such lawsuits through adequate risk management and municipal counsel.
The Office of the City Attorney and its employees clearly recognize and
understand the serious and unprecedented financial challenges facing the City.
Our employees have worked hard and sacrificed much over the past year to
reduce costs and accomplish increasingly more with fewer resources. In fact, as
you well know, I personally advised you and your staff on multiple occasions that
this Office and its employees were willing and prepared to take on more
responsibility, including the City’s entire Workers’ Compensation and debt/tax
collections programs, in order to assist the’ City in reducing costs and generating
much-needed revenue. As I stated, there is no need to contract out such work
to outside vendors and contractors when we have experienced and dedicated
City employees who can more efficiently handle such matters.
Our success to date in bearing our share of the burden and reducing the
City’s deficit is proven and easy to measure. We have successfully performed
our duties, while at the same time dramatically cutting costs and reducing staff
from the General Fund. For example, this Office will reach the targeted goal of
less than 750 General Fund positions well before June 30, 2010, which
significantly exceeds the $8.6 million in savings requested in the Mid-Year
Financial Status report issued in January 2010.
Your recommended ·18% reduction to this Office and resulting 100 layoffs
will reduce our staff to an untenable 650 General Fund positions. Such a
reduction will constitute a budget loss of nearly 35% and more than 200 General
Fund positions in just one year. The proposed 18% reduction and layoffs will
severely impair the ability of this Office to provide the public safety and fiscal
protection services mandated by my authority under the Charter.
I cannot emphasize enough that we are a public safety office – protecting
both the safety and health of our citizens and our City treasury. Prosecuting
crimes and defending the City treasury are core missions of this City, and our
Office and its prosecutors, litigators, investigators and their support staff perform these essential services in a highly professional and cost effective manner.
Accordingly, I will firmly and publicly object to your proposed
disproportionate reductions and resulting layoffs that will significantly impact
essential and core City services provided by this Office. I will address my
concerns to the Council, where I intend to demonstrate the serious flaws in your
proposed Budget. I anticipate that the Council will provide much needed
guidance and direction, and eventually allocate and approve appropriate funds to.
fully support the essential services provided by this Office without the need for
any layoffs of prosecutors, litigators, investigators or their support staff.
Ultimately, I will take whatever actions are necessary in order to ensure
that the Office of the City Attorney is able to perform its mandated role under the
Charter to protect the City’s residents and its treasury. The City deserves
nothing less.
Carmen A. Trutanich
City Attorney
Levi’s Vintage Clothing are always sought after when true vintage finds are hard to come by. There’s no secret that chambray will always be around, and there’s no better item to own than something that’s crafted from a classic label. Made from 100% English cotton broadcloth, the shirt features two different sized chest pockets, hidden button collar with selvedge edge detailing. The neck also has double fastening at the top button for extra vintage detailing. Available at Lark.
Posted by David Heinzmann at 6:03 p.m.
GOP leaders today picked a former state party chairman and U.S. Senate candidate to be Illinois’ new representative on the Republican National Committee.
Rich Williamson, an attorney who lost the 1992 U.S. Senate contest to Democrat Carol Moseley Braun, was selected by the GOP state central committee from a field of candidates during a meeting at a Chicago hotel.
Williamson succeeds Pat Brady, who vacated the position when he became chairman of the Illinois Republican Party last year.
Also interested in the national post were conservative Carpentersville businessman Jack Roeser and former governor candidate Jim Oberweis. The selection was made before a Republican fundraiser in honor of the statewide ticket and featuring controversial RNC Chairman Michael Steele. It was supposed to be open to the media, but Brady decided to close it today.

Each week, our German correspondent slices and dices the latest rumblings, news, and quick-hit driving impressions from the other side of the pond. His byline may say Jens Meiners, but we simply call him . . . the Continental.
Lightness as Perception and Reality
Just before the Old World shut down under a cloud of Icelandic volcanic ash, there was an unusually high number of new-vehicle introductions in Europe last week.
Audi held what was probably the most anticipated press launch when it showcased its 450-hp RS5 (shown above) at the Ascari racetrack near Marbella, Spain. Conditions were perfect for our first drive of Audi’s sportiest offering south of the R8, and the roads surrounding the racetrack provided fantastic space for extra play—as back roads go, few countries in Europe beat Spain. Fully laden with electronic gizmos to sharpen its responses, the Audi feels far lighter than its 3900 or so pounds would suggest.
2011 Lotus Elise
The Lotus Elise follows a sharply different approach—it doesn’t need electronic crutches because it actually is light. The 2011 model was previewed in England on the sort of country roads that make grown men weep. We love the Elise, but were somewhat underwhelmed by the new, Toyota-supplied 1.6-liter four-cylinder entry-level engine. Lotus is vaunting the 134-hp car’s 37-mpg Euro-cycle rating, but the slightly restyled new Elise proves that going for fuel efficiency at all costs can kill the fun even in a quintessential sports car such as this. The extremely tall gearing for the six-speed manual renders the top two gears unusable. Step on the gas in top gear, and the response you get is about as enthusiastic as the earth crowd’s reaction to snow in Copenhagen. (We don’t get the reference either—Ed.) Our advice: Go for one of the more powerful engines and forget about saving the planet.
Mazda Sticks with the Rotary Engine, While Audi Adopts It
Instead of the planet, let’s save the rotary engine. The Mazda RX-8 will be taken off the European market at the end of 2010, as its current engine won’t pass Euro 5 emissions. But Mazda won’t abandon the unique engine type. Internally called 16X, the next-generation Mazda rotary will again be a two-rotor setup, but this time displacing 1.6 liters instead of the current 1.3. Even in normally aspirated form, the 16X engine will make around 300 hp, which will be plenty for the smaller, lighter sports car in which it will be found. Turbocharged versions are possible, as is a hydrogen-powered variation. The U.S. market will keep getting the RX-8 for the foreseeable future, but we love the fact that a lighter car in the spirit of the last-generation RX-7 will replace it.
Audi is looking at the rotary engine, too, fitting a Wankel powerplant to the A1 e-tron concept shown in Geneva in March. The one-disc rotary engine was co-developed with Austrian engineering house AVL. We experienced its operation, and it’s smooth and quiet and avoids the shuddering on restart of a piston engine. Who wants to be disturbed as they’re humming and singing and smiling while depleting their electric-vehicle’s batteries? Not us. It’s certainly nice, but our next question was whether we could see a powerful rotary-engined Audi without all the electric-motor wizardry. Not a chance, says Ingolstadt. Pity.
Other Debuts, Forbidden and Otherwise
2011 Volkswagen Polo GTI
VW showed the 180-hp Polo GTI in the metal at the Leipzig auto show, and BMW used the same occasion to officially launch the 5-series Touring (a.k.a. Sports Wagon). Both cars are interesting and very cool—the 5er wagon is better looking than the sedan in our book—but they won’t come to the U.S. unless thousands of American enthusiasts deluge VW and BMW with blank checks. Among the Leipzig debuts that you will be getting were two minor Audi freshenings. The 2011 TT and TTS get some mechanical and cosmetic tweaks, and the 2011 Q7 does without aesthetic alterations but receives new engines, including Audi’s supercharged 3.0-liter V-6 in two different strengths. Side note: That engine is the gas-burning half of the hybrid powertrain available in the new Porsche Cayenne. Says a Porsche engineer: “A supercharged engine is not a dream in terms of efficiency, but it’s what we had to work with.” Read: Our new VW overlords made us use it.
Dacia Duster
Other notables this week include the Dacia Duster, which just went on sale and is the first SUV offered by Renault’s Romanian entry-level brand. Starting at €11,900 ($15,800; that’s dirt, dirt cheap for Europe), it undercuts the competition by many thousands of euros. And, with its trendy shape, it shows that Romanians can bodge together a styling department, too.
We sampled the Alfa Romeo Giulietta, and found it to be a surprisingly good, solid, and sporty car, and if the brand has a shot in the US market, it is with this hatchback. (Fiat announced yesterday that we’d get the car, or a derivative, in 2014.) Its top engine is a 232-hp, 1.8-liter four. We haven’t seen anything out of Chrysler’s Auburn Hills, Michigan, headquarters in some time as good as the Giulietta. Here’s hoping the Fiat-Chrysler merger pays off in a big way.
Speaking of not seeing things, we haven’t seen any Fisker Karmas on the road, and now we’re hearing Fisker likely won’t be able to deliver regular-production cars before 2011. Only buyers of the sold-out Signature Edition will get behind the wheel of the hand-built Karma in 2010. Probably.
Volt Does Europe, and the Push for a New Opel GT
Chevrolet is planning to launch the Volt in Europe alongside the Opel Ampera, which is identical under the skin. The decision reeks of a move made simply to keep Chevrolet Europe happy. Turnabout is fair play, we say, so why not turn the Ampera into a Buick back in the States? Retro remains the rage, so let’s bring back badge-engineering! Continuing the retro theme, Opel’s powerful head of the worker’s council, Klaus Franz, is pushing for a retro-styled sports coupe in the spirit of the legendary late-1960s Opel GT or Manta. Opel also is testing higher-powered versions of the Insignia, some of which are approaching 400 hp. Lesser Insignias are being reworked for the U.S. as the Buick Regal, so send that one to America as a Regal Grand National!
Renault and Daimler are teaming up to jointly develop engines and transmissions. We see the logic behind exchanging small three- and four-cylinder units, but are less clear on putting Daimler engines into Infinitis. Nissan’s VQ V-6s can be a bit rough, but they’re still very good engines. Carlos Ghosn and Dieter Zetsche, who have lived through their share of failed mergers, are taking it easy this time: The three-percent swap of capital qualifies as a modest start, and that makes the most sense of all.
Autobahn Tested: Q5 and XF Diesels
Road cars we’ve sampled include the Audi Q5 3.0 TDI, which seems incongruous in its setup. The liveliness of the steering, suspension, and the dual-clutch transmission don’t match well with the relaxed character of the powerful turbo-diesel, which always needs a moment of contemplation before responding. We were highly impressed, on the other hand, by the Jaguar XF with a 271-hp, 3.0-liter turbo-diesel. Torquey and quick, it’s our favorite corporate jet right now. Well, until we’re sure the volcanic ash has cleared and we once again feel comfortable climbing aboard an actual corporate jet.
Just before the Old World shut down thanks to volcanic ashes and overzealous politicians, the industry has unusual number of vehicle launches and .
Related posts:
by Grist
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Art: Nat Damm
Anita Maltbia
Director, Green Impact Zone
Kansas City, Mo.
Anita Maltbia is spearheading the transformation of 150 square blocks of Kansas City, Mo., from blight to bright. The Green Impact Zone project,
which she directs, is resuscitating this economically depressed
African-American neighborhood by putting local residents to work
weatherizing the zone’s 2,500 homes and by developing a bus
rapid-transit system that will connect the zone to other parts of the
region. With $50 million in funding from
the federal economic-stimulus package, the initiative will also offer
community policing, job training, and health and wellness programs.
Maltbia, who has 30 years of experience in city government and
community activism, earned a coveted spot in the First Lady’s box at
this year’s State of the Union address.
Meet more people who are redefining green.
Related Links:
How to make cities more foot-friendly
Green cars do not make green cities

Ahead of the 2010 Beijing Auto Show BMW has announced that the company’s first mass-produced electric car will be released in 2013. Having just completed a year’s worth of electric vehicle testing with the Mini E, the BMW group now feels it has collected enough data to go full steam ahead with battery-powered cars.
Although it is likely a bit of a bummer to Mini fans, as BMW has previously stated, the Mini E (shown above) is not slated for production. Instead, BMW will start a completely new sub-brand to sell EVs dubbed ‘Megacity.’ Reportedly, the first Megacity will be a 5-seater in the size class of a VW Golf and will have a rear-mounted motor as well as rear wheel drive.
by Grist
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Art: Nat Damm
Dorothy Le
Planning and Policy Director, Los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition
Los Angeles, Calif.
Dorothy Le wants to get you out and about on two wheels. Not sure where to start? Watch her series of videos on how to find the bike that’s right for you. At the Los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition,
she works to make the archetypal car-obsessed city more welcoming to
cyclists and to make the cycling community more welcoming to women and
people of color. Le has organized community bike tours, women’s
bicycle rides, safety workshops, a bicycle count. While a student at UCLA, she led E3: Ecology, Economy, Equity, an environmental and social-justice organization, and helped launch the Green Initiative Fund, a grant-making fund for sustainability projects on the UCLA campus.
Follow the Los Angeles County Bicycle Coalition on Twitter.
Watch a video about Le’s bike activism:
Meet more people who are redefining green.
Related Links:
Does ‘sustainable transportation’ mean better cars or fewer cars?
Green cars do not make green cities
Filed under: Convertible, Performance, Etc., Tesla, Electric
With the thousands of prizes given away on The Price is Right over the centuries decades, it’s hard to top the things that have come before. But, today, a new record will be set. To mark Earth Day, Drew Carey and company will offer up a Tesla Roadster on today’s show. According to a short note Tesla sent us, “This will be the most expensive prize ever offered on the show. CBS anticipates this to be one of their most exciting episodes ever.” If you miss it on the broadcast, you can watch the show here, probably starting tomorrow. Having not seen the show in years, we were honestly blown away by how excited the people who “come on down” still get as they make their way to the stage. Amazing.
UPDATE: Video added after the jump. We won’t spoil the outcome for you.
Gallery: Review: 2010 Tesla Roadster Sport
[Source: Tesla]
Earth Day Prizelust: Tesla Roadster on Price is Right is most expensive freebie ever [UPDATED w/video] originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 22 Apr 2010 18:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
As the U.S. Coast Guard continues to search for 11 workers missing in an oil rig explosion off the coast of Louisiana, concern is widening about the potential for a “major” spill because of the explosion. BP and the Coast Guard are moving assets in to help combat a possible spill. At a news conference this afternoon, officials talked about a one mile by five mile “sheen” that’s on the water now, the result of the explosions on the rig. The rig itself has slipped underwater. There’s a remotely operated vehicle that’s underwater checking for damage. Two pipelines in the area were closed as a precaution. The Deepwater Horizon sat 42 miles off the coast of Louisiana.
Although the search continues for the 11 missing workers, officials say they have reports from survivors that the missing may have been near the site of the explosion and may not have been able to evacuate. Published reports say workers on the rig only had 5-10 minutes to escape. The survivors, about 115 of them, are safe and have been reunited with their families. The Coast Guard has seached about 2000 square miles looking for the missing.
Do women spend more time in the restroom than men?
“The stereotype that women spend more time in the restroom than men was examined, with the expectation of a small magnitude difference. Method.—Men and women (N = 120, 60 each sex) were observed entering and exiting the restroom in a college library. Participants were of various ages and ethnicities. Data were collected during 4 days in 2 wk. for 1 or 2 hours at different times in the afternoon, evening, and night. The number of stalls, urinals, and sinks and proximity to convenient and discrete observation posts were similar. Time spent in the restroom was measured in seconds using the online U.S. government clock (www.time.gov) set to Eastern Standard Time at a library computer terminal. For purposes of interrater reliability, two observers timed each participant and retained the data only if the observers agreed within a margin of 2.0 sec.
Results and discussion.—An independent samples t test indicated that women (M = 178.9 sec., SD = 96.6) spent significantly more time in the restroom than did men (M = 118.4 sec., SD = 102.6; t118 = –3.33, p = .001; d = .34). The average difference was 61.5 sec. Johnson, Sholcosky, Gabello, Ragni, and Ogonosky (2003) found that women were nearly twice as likely as men to wash their hands after using a public restroom. This act of routine hygiene by itself could substantially account for the additional time women spent in the restroom in our study. Participants were not observed while inside the restroom and results are based on students in a university library. The results support the belief that small, real gender differences have been exaggerated in common lore.”
Photo: Engrish.com
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I always imagined fairies as pansy Disney cartoons. But Gwenael Nicolas’ ‘Sparks’ lamp paints a different picture—one of a brazen, orbicular creature of light that leaves sharp crystals in its wake. [designboom] More »
by Grist
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Art: Nat Damm
Rob Jones
Cofounder, Crop Mob
Carrboro, N.C.
Like a growing number of young folks across the country, Rob Jones, 27, likes to
get his hands in the dirt, making his foodshed and community more robust and
vibrant. Once each month, Jones and a band of
young agrarians alight upon an area farm. Calling themselves the Crop Mob, they do a big project together—say, break new ground for raised beds or harvest a labor-intensive crop like
sweet potatoes. The host farmers make a big meal, and everyone eats together.
Sustainable agriculture is “way, way, way more labor-intensive than industrial
agriculture,” Jones told
The New
York Times Magazine, and the long hours can hamper one’s social life.
Crop Mobs help by creating a “sense of community that people are looking for”—and “you get a lot of work done.” Since the Times article came out, the
idea has gone viral. Crop Mobs have broken
out all over the country. Read a Grist
article about Crop Mobs.
Meet more people who are redefining green.
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Steve Breeze popped into my last post and muttered something about the serial or “Oxford” comma which was, until shortly after I read that comment, missing from the blog title. It’s a bone of contention, this penultimate comma in a list of things.
For example, is it “The grocer had carrots, rutabagas, and celery,” or “The grocer had carrots, rutabagas and celery”? Which is right? Not even copyeditors agree. For me, even though I can get emotional about some punctuational issues (if the grocer has carrot’s and rutabaga’s, I will take my business elsewhere), this one is like gun control: an issue about which I am able to take sides to the satisfaction of the divided majority. I can see both sides, and am OK either way. Take the comma or leave it.
But it seems like this is a critical question that will affect the success of this blog and the fates of us all, so please weigh in. I will play the winner. Make your arguments below.
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A flying frog that changes colors, a stick insect that’s a foot and a half long, and a “ninja slug” that shoots “love darts.” These are among the 120 new species discovered or described over the past three years on the lush island of Borneo–the Southeast Asia island divided between Malaysia, Indonesia, and Brunei.
On Earth Day, the conservation group WWF released a report on some of the recent discoveries in a 54-million-acre nature preserve known as the Heart of Borneo. WWF ecologist Adam Tomasek says that on an average, three new species were found every month.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Slugs?
This colorful green and yellow slug species, named Ibycus rachelae, was discovered atop high mountains in the Malaysian section of Borneo. The slug has a tail three times the length of its head, and it wraps the tail around itself when it is resting. From the Ariophantidae family, this unusual species makes use of so-called ‘love darts’ in courtship. Made of calcium carbonate, the love dart is harpoon-like which pierces and injects a hormone into a mate, and may play a role in increasing the chances of reproduction [Guardian].
Image: Peter Koomen / WWF
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“I’m not sure when ‘accessible’ became a dirty word,” Ms. Alsop said. “I’m not of the belief that something has to be inscrutable in order to be great.”
Ms. Alsop is Marin Alsop, music director of the Baltimore Symphony (and, early in her career, of Oregon’s Eugene Symphony) and she’s being quoted in this morning’s New York Times in Vivien Schweitzer’s engaging profile of composer Jennifer Higdon, the freshly minted Pulitzer Prize winner for her Violin Concerto, written for performer Hilary Hahn.
Alsop, a fan, expanded on Higdon’s music: “Her scores are ‘very strong rhythmically … with real scope and shape and architecture. She knows how to bring out the best of the various instrumental colors in the orchestra.’ She added that Ms. Higdon’s music is ‘very immediate, authentic, sincere and without pretense.’”
Sounds right. Almost a year ago — on May 18, 2009 — Mr. Scatter had this to say about Higdon’s music, on the occasion of an impending concert of her music by Third Angle:
As I type I’m listening to a recording that Third Angle artistic director Ron Blessinger gave me of Philadelphia composer and double Grammy winner Jennifer Higdon’s Celestial Hymns and Zaka, and I’m liking it a WHOLE lot.
It’s jangly, insouciant, nervous, brash yet somehow introspective music. It’s thoroughly American. And it’s accessible, which in this case means not dumbed down but smart and extroverted — speaking, like Gershwin and Copland and Ellen Taaffe Zwilich and many others, in a voice that would actually like to be heard by an intelligent general audience. Makes me think of Bartok crossed with Charles Lloyd, maybe because of the clarinet and flute.
What’s more, from everything I’ve heard and read, Higdon’s a delightful person, exactly the sort of public ambassador that contemporary classical music (I know; that sounds like an oxymoron. Can you think of a better way to say it?) needs.
Prizes are prizes, with all of the politicking, guesswork and compromises that go along with that. But sometimes you’re glad they turn out they way they do. Cheers, Jennifer Higdon. Enjoy the Champagne.
by Grist
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Art: Nat Damm
Leanne Mai-ly Hilgart
Founder, Vaute Couture
Chicago, Ill.
Leanne Mai-ly Hilgart, 27, launched Vaute Couture last year with a line of chic, eco-friendly, cruelty-free, ethically
and locally produced coats that are warm enough for Chicago winters. As a vegan, model, and MBA, she brings a unique perspective
to her work—and strong values too; all profits from one of her styles
are donated to Farm Sanctuary, a haven for rescued farm animals. Vaute Couture also sells vegan-themed T-shirts and jewelry. Hilgart tells you about it all on her blog.
Watch Hilgart talk about her business:
Meet more people who are redefining green.
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News Corp. (NYSE: NWS) has invested in Beyond Oblivion, a one-year-old music start-up, as part of a second round of funding worth $10 million.
The second-round investment was disclosed in a regulatory filing yesterday. CNet reported that according to multiple sources the New York-based company is working on a plan to help consumer electronics makers pre-load music on portable devices and computers. The service could be similar to Nokia’s Comes With Music, which allows users to download an unlimited number of songs for a year with the purchase of a phone.
So far, Beyond Oblivion has not been able to acquire music rights from the major record labels, but perhaps that’s where News Corp. could help out. It already operates MySpace Music, which is run in partnership with the four major recording companies.
On the company’s web site, it has a countdown clock to “insurrection day,” which now stands at roughly 170 days and 22 hours. The clock is counting down until Nov. 10, or as they call it 10-10-10.
The company describes itself as a music service that combines the stickiness of a social network with “unlimited life-of-device access” to the largest music library on Earth. Content owners are paid per-play no matter if the original music file was ripped, bootlegged or legally or illegally downloaded.
by Grist
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Art: Nat Damm
Zakiya Harris
Founder and Executive Director, Grind for the Green
Berkeley, Calif.
Zakiya Harris, 32, founded Grind for the Green in
2007 to use hip-hop to move youth of color from the margins to the
epicenter of the green movement, helping steer them toward educational
opportunities and green careers. The group puts on the solar-powered
G4G Eco-Music Festival in San Francisco, and this Earth Day it’s
rolling out a Get Fresh campaign that aims to get young people educated
about and active in environmental issues. Harris also makes her own
music as one half of the eco-conscious hip-hop duo FIYAWATA and works as an eco-marketing consultant.
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by Grist
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Art: Nat Damm
Matt Golden
President, Founder, and Chief Building Scientist, Recurve
Sausalito, Calif.
Matt Golden, 35, has become a golden boy of the nascent energy-efficiency industry. He started Recurve—formerly called Sustainable Spaces—back in 2004 before retrofit
was hip. While Recurve works on a software-driven solution to scale up
the energy-efficiency business from mom-and-pop shops to a sustainable
industry, Golden spends much of his time in Washington lobbying for Home Star and other legislation to fund energy-efficiency work and create thousands of jobs. Read more about Golden in a Grist article on Home Star and a Grist article on Sustainable Spaces.
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